Which Airline Programs Let You Pool Miles?

Tom Broucksou CommentsAugust 1, 2018

Most airlines allow you to purchase award flights for other people. While this is a great option to have, it’s not as powerful as the ability to pool or share miles. Combining miles with family or friends can help you purchase award flights that you wouldn’t otherwise be able to afford.

Another benefit of pooling miles is that individuals who have accrued only a small number of miles, such as children who don’t often travel, can still put them to good use by sharing them with other members. Those miles might otherwise go unused.

Almost all airlines allow you to share or transfer miles, but only a few allow you to do it for free. Let’s take a look at those carriers.

Domestic Airlines

Only three U.S.-based airlines—JetBlue, Hawaiian Airlines and Sun Country—allow you to share miles for free. JetBlue, the fifth biggest domestic carrier, allows pooling among family members. Its Family Pooling program allows up to two adults and five children to share TrueBlue points. If you want to transfer to someone outside of your family, it costs 1.25 cents per point.

There are few important rules to keep in mind if you’re thinking about pooling JetBlue TrueBlue points. The carrier requires each Family Pooling account to have a household head. That person controls all the points that are transferred to the family account.

JetBlue also requires each person who participates to contribute at least 10 percent of the miles they earn. This shouldn’t be a big deal if your family is combining all of their miles anyways, but it might discourage friends from creating a shared family account.

Hawaiian Airlines doesn’t have a pooling program, but it does allow you to transfer miles for free to anyone who has a co-branded Hawaiian Airlines credit card. Without a card, it costs a cent per mile plus a $25 transaction fee. You can receive miles up to ten times a year.

Sun Country, a small Minneapolis-based airline that focuses on holiday travel, has the most generous sharing program. Members of the airline’s UFly Rewards program can transfer points with up to 10 other people for free.

The four largest U.S.-based airlines—American, Delta, Southwest and United—will charge you a lot to transfer miles. In most cases it’s not worth it. You’ll be better off either paying cash for your flight or waiting to earn enough miles.

Here’s a rundown of what the big four charge:

American

Delta

Southwest

United

Cost per mile/point

1.25 cents

1 cent

1 cent

1.5 cents

Additional fees

None

$30 per transaction

None

$30 per transaction

Transfer time

Up to 8 hours

Instantaneous

Instantaneous

Up to 48 hours

Additional terms

· AAdvantage account must be older than 30 days
· 200,000-mile maximum per year

· 30,000-mile maximum per transaction
· 150,000-mile maximum per year
· Up to 4 recipients per transaction

Chase Ultimate Rewards allows you transfer points to a spouse or domestic partner’s frequent flyer account or UR account. American Express Membership Rewards, on the other hand, lets you transfer points to frequent flyer or MR accounts of authorized card users. It’s easy to add users to most accounts.

Unfortunately neither Citi ThankYou nor Starwood Preferred Guest allow transfers to frequent flyer accounts that aren’t in the cardholder’s name. The good news, though, is that you can transfer points to other program members. They can then top up their own frequent flyer accounts.

Citi has the most liberal policy, allowing transfers to any other TY member. SPG, on the other hand, requires that members live at the same address.

Whether you transfer points from a credit card or are lucky enough to belong to a frequent flyer account that allows free pooling, there’s no reason to let miles sit unused in a family member’s account. Boost that balance or share those miles and get that free flight faster.